Rutgers beats North Carolina in Quick Lane Bowl

DETROIT (AP) North Carolina coach Larry Fedora knew that his team was going to have to play a very good game to beat Rutgers in the Quick Lane Bowl.

That didn't happen, and the Tar Heels looked like the team that was blown out 35-7 by North Carolina State in its last game.

''I'm very disappointed with what we did in the last few games of the season, and especially in these last two,'' Fedora said after the Tar Heels' 40-21 loss Friday night at Ford Field. ''We're going to have to take a long look at some things.''

The final score was misleading. North Carolina (6-7) trailed 40-7 midway through the fourth quarter before a successful onside kick helped the Tar Heels add two late touchdowns.

''The game of football is pretty simple,'' Fedora said. ''If you give away the ball on offense, don't force any turnovers on defense and make multiple game-changing mistakes on special teams, you aren't going to win football games.''

Tar Heels quarterback Marquise Williams was never able to get going, although he did throw for one score and run for another.

''They did exactly what we expected them to do in every phase of the game,'' Fedora said. ''We just didn't stop them.''

North Carolina's biggest problem was freshman running back Josh Hicks, who ran for 202 yards and a touchdown.

''This is a childhood dream come true,'' said Hicks, the MVP trophy sitting just above him in his locker. ''It is just now hitting me what happened out there. Our O-line was just so good today - they were opening lanes, and all I had to do was hit them.

Senior Gary Nova threw for 184 yards and two touchdowns, and freshman Robert Martin ran for 100 yards and two scores to help the Scarlet Knights (8-5) cap their first Big Ten season.

''I saw the predictions before the season, so I knew what the public perception of our team was, especially going into the Big Ten,'' Rutgers coach Kyle Flood said. ''But I have always believed that this was going to be a competitive team that was going to play in the postseason, and we proved that all year.''

Owned and operated by the NFL's Detroit Lions, the bowl replaced the Little Caesar's Pizza Bowl, which had been played in Detroit under various names since 1997. The new bowl was hoped to make a bigger impact with a Big Ten vs. ACC matchup, but drew a disappointing crowd. The announced attendance was 23,876 - smaller than all but one Pizza Bowl - and the actual crowd appeared to be less than half of that.

''We knew this was going to be a challenge,'' said Tom Lewand, president of both the Lions and the bowl. ''When you partner with the Big Ten and the ACC, you know you will get some geographic diversity, and we knew there would be travel challenges for supporters around the holidays.''

Rutgers led 40-7 before the Tar Heels scored twice in the final 7 minutes. North Carolina also had two second-half touchdown passes taken away because of interference penalties.

The Scarlet Knights lost the coin toss, but got the ball when North Carolina deferred. They only needed 2:17 to take the lead, with Nova hitting a wide-open Andre Patton for a 34-yard touchdown strike.

North Carolina got into Rutgers' territory its first two drives, but turned the ball over on the first and punted on the second. The Tar Heels blocking a punt to take over at the 30, but the drive stalled at the 5 and a fake field goal was buried for a 4-yard loss.

The Scarlet Knights answered with a 91-yard drive that ended with Hicks' 21-yard run that made it 14-0 early in the second. Rutgers then turned another Tar Heels fumble into a quick touchdown - Martin's 8-yard run - but missed the extra point, leaving it 20-0.

The Tar Heels missed a field goal, then shanked a punt 20 yards, allowing Rutgers to kick a 19-yard field goal that made it 23-0 at halftime.

Williams got North Carolina on the board with a 1-yard run, but the Scarlet Knights came back with a 34-yard pass from Nova to Andrew Turzilli to make it 30-7. Martin's second touchdown run - this one from 28 yards - gave Rutgers a 30-point advantage early in the fourth.